Relation of stenosis morphology and clinical presentation to the procedural results of directional coronary atherectomy

Directional coronary atherectomy has recently become available to treat coronary stenoses. This study was performed to determine the relation of patient characteristics and stenosis morphology to procedural outcome with directional coronary atherectomy to gain insight into which patients might be be...

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Veröffentlicht in:Circulation (New York, N.Y.) N.Y.), 1991-08, Vol.84 (2), p.644-653
Hauptverfasser: ELLIS, S. G, DE CESARE, N. B, HOLMES, D. R, PINKERTON, C. A, WHITLOW, P, KING, S. B, GHAZZAL, Z. M. B, KEREIAKES, D. J, POPMA, J. J, MENKE, K. K, TOPOL, E. J
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container_end_page 653
container_issue 2
container_start_page 644
container_title Circulation (New York, N.Y.)
container_volume 84
creator ELLIS, S. G
DE CESARE, N. B
HOLMES, D. R
PINKERTON, C. A
WHITLOW, P
KING, S. B
GHAZZAL, Z. M. B
KEREIAKES, D. J
POPMA, J. J
MENKE, K. K
TOPOL, E. J
description Directional coronary atherectomy has recently become available to treat coronary stenoses. This study was performed to determine the relation of patient characteristics and stenosis morphology to procedural outcome with directional coronary atherectomy to gain insight into which patients might be best treated with this device. Four hundred stenoses from 378 patients consecutively treated at six major referral institutions were analyzed. Angiographic data were assessed at a central angiographic laboratory using standardized morphological criteria and computer-assisted quantitative dimensional analyses. Procedural success was achieved in 87.8% of stenoses, and major ischemic complications (death, myocardial infarction, and emergency bypass surgery) occurred in 6.3% of patients. Lesion success and complications were closely correlated with recognized modified American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association Task Force lesion morphological criteria. Observed for type A stenoses were 93% success and 3% complication rates; for type B1 stenoses, 88% success and 6% complication rates; and for type B2 stenoses, 75% success and 13% complication rates, respectively. There were too few type C stenoses treated to analyze. Furthermore, multivariate testing demonstrated stenosis angulation (multivariate p less than 0.001), proximal tortuosity (p less than 0.001), decreased preatherectomy minimum lumen dimension (p = 0.032), and calcification (p = 0.041) to correlate independently with adverse outcome and complex, probably thrombus-associated stenoses to have a favorable outcome (p = 0.055). Operator experience (p = 0.020) and a history of restenosis (p = 0.022) also favorably influenced outcome. The procedural outcome of directional coronary atherectomy is highly associated with coronary stenosis morphology. Furthermore, after appropriate stratification for morphology and clinical presentation, overall atherectomy procedural outcome may be similar to that achieved with coronary angioplasty. However, specific subsets of patients may have relatively better outcome with either atherectomy or balloon angioplasty.
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G ; DE CESARE, N. B ; HOLMES, D. R ; PINKERTON, C. A ; WHITLOW, P ; KING, S. B ; GHAZZAL, Z. M. B ; KEREIAKES, D. J ; POPMA, J. J ; MENKE, K. K ; TOPOL, E. J</creator><creatorcontrib>ELLIS, S. G ; DE CESARE, N. B ; HOLMES, D. R ; PINKERTON, C. A ; WHITLOW, P ; KING, S. B ; GHAZZAL, Z. M. B ; KEREIAKES, D. J ; POPMA, J. J ; MENKE, K. K ; TOPOL, E. J</creatorcontrib><description>Directional coronary atherectomy has recently become available to treat coronary stenoses. This study was performed to determine the relation of patient characteristics and stenosis morphology to procedural outcome with directional coronary atherectomy to gain insight into which patients might be best treated with this device. Four hundred stenoses from 378 patients consecutively treated at six major referral institutions were analyzed. Angiographic data were assessed at a central angiographic laboratory using standardized morphological criteria and computer-assisted quantitative dimensional analyses. Procedural success was achieved in 87.8% of stenoses, and major ischemic complications (death, myocardial infarction, and emergency bypass surgery) occurred in 6.3% of patients. Lesion success and complications were closely correlated with recognized modified American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association Task Force lesion morphological criteria. Observed for type A stenoses were 93% success and 3% complication rates; for type B1 stenoses, 88% success and 6% complication rates; and for type B2 stenoses, 75% success and 13% complication rates, respectively. There were too few type C stenoses treated to analyze. Furthermore, multivariate testing demonstrated stenosis angulation (multivariate p less than 0.001), proximal tortuosity (p less than 0.001), decreased preatherectomy minimum lumen dimension (p = 0.032), and calcification (p = 0.041) to correlate independently with adverse outcome and complex, probably thrombus-associated stenoses to have a favorable outcome (p = 0.055). Operator experience (p = 0.020) and a history of restenosis (p = 0.022) also favorably influenced outcome. The procedural outcome of directional coronary atherectomy is highly associated with coronary stenosis morphology. Furthermore, after appropriate stratification for morphology and clinical presentation, overall atherectomy procedural outcome may be similar to that achieved with coronary angioplasty. 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J</au><format>journal</format><genre>article</genre><ristype>JOUR</ristype><atitle>Relation of stenosis morphology and clinical presentation to the procedural results of directional coronary atherectomy</atitle><jtitle>Circulation (New York, N.Y.)</jtitle><addtitle>Circulation</addtitle><date>1991-08-01</date><risdate>1991</risdate><volume>84</volume><issue>2</issue><spage>644</spage><epage>653</epage><pages>644-653</pages><issn>0009-7322</issn><eissn>1524-4539</eissn><coden>CIRCAZ</coden><abstract>Directional coronary atherectomy has recently become available to treat coronary stenoses. This study was performed to determine the relation of patient characteristics and stenosis morphology to procedural outcome with directional coronary atherectomy to gain insight into which patients might be best treated with this device. Four hundred stenoses from 378 patients consecutively treated at six major referral institutions were analyzed. Angiographic data were assessed at a central angiographic laboratory using standardized morphological criteria and computer-assisted quantitative dimensional analyses. Procedural success was achieved in 87.8% of stenoses, and major ischemic complications (death, myocardial infarction, and emergency bypass surgery) occurred in 6.3% of patients. Lesion success and complications were closely correlated with recognized modified American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association Task Force lesion morphological criteria. Observed for type A stenoses were 93% success and 3% complication rates; for type B1 stenoses, 88% success and 6% complication rates; and for type B2 stenoses, 75% success and 13% complication rates, respectively. There were too few type C stenoses treated to analyze. Furthermore, multivariate testing demonstrated stenosis angulation (multivariate p less than 0.001), proximal tortuosity (p less than 0.001), decreased preatherectomy minimum lumen dimension (p = 0.032), and calcification (p = 0.041) to correlate independently with adverse outcome and complex, probably thrombus-associated stenoses to have a favorable outcome (p = 0.055). Operator experience (p = 0.020) and a history of restenosis (p = 0.022) also favorably influenced outcome. The procedural outcome of directional coronary atherectomy is highly associated with coronary stenosis morphology. Furthermore, after appropriate stratification for morphology and clinical presentation, overall atherectomy procedural outcome may be similar to that achieved with coronary angioplasty. 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source MEDLINE; EZB Electronic Journals Library; American Heart Association; Journals@Ovid Complete
subjects Biological and medical sciences
Cardiac Catheterization - adverse effects
Cineangiography
Coronary Artery Disease - diagnostic imaging
Coronary Artery Disease - surgery
Coronary Disease - etiology
Coronary Vessels - injuries
Diagnosis, Computer-Assisted
Diseases of the cardiovascular system
Female
Humans
Male
Medical sciences
Middle Aged
Postoperative Complications
Radiotherapy. Instrumental treatment. Physiotherapy. Reeducation. Rehabilitation, orthophony, crenotherapy. Diet therapy and various other treatments (general aspects)
Risk Factors
Vascular Surgical Procedures - methods
Wounds, Penetrating
title Relation of stenosis morphology and clinical presentation to the procedural results of directional coronary atherectomy
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